Muscat: When Apple pulled the curtain on the iPhone Air, the world gasped at its impossibly thin silhouette and flawless balance of elegance and power. But behind the titanium frame and futuristic design lies the story of a young man with Bangladeshi roots, raised in London, whose creative journey carried him all the way to Cupertino: Abidur Chowdhury.
Though born and raised in London, Chowdhury’s Bangladeshi heritage shaped his sense of resilience and ambition. At Loughborough University, he immersed himself in design, winning the James Dyson Foundation bursary, the 3D Hubs Student Grant, and later the Red Dot Design Award in 2016 for his “Plug and Play” concept. For him, design was never just about aesthetics, it was about problem-solving with beauty.
Chowdhury’s career path was anything but linear. He honed his skills at consultancies like Cambridge Consultants and Curventa, collaborated with the acclaimed design studio Layer, and even launched his own firm, Abidur Chowdhury Design, before Apple called in 2019. Each step stitched together a portfolio of work that blended innovation with empathy.
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At Apple’s headquarters in Cupertino, Chowdhury joined a culture obsessed with detail. His boldest challenge became the iPhone Air — a device that had to feel futuristic yet uncompromisingly functional. Every design choice mattered: a titanium shell, a reengineered camera plateau, AI-driven photography, and a profile so slim it seemed almost impossible. The result was not just a thinner iPhone, but a redefinition of what thin could mean without sacrificing strength.
Carrying Bangladesh to the global stage
Today, Chowdhury splits his life between San Francisco and Cupertino, but his story continues to inspire Bangladeshi communities worldwide. His journey proves that innovation is borderless that a young man with roots in Dhaka can help design the world’s most iconic product, and in doing so, leave an indelible mark on global technology.





